Haze/Film on Headlights? 1999 300M

Discussion in 'Chrysler 300' started by Ralph Griffith, May 11, 2007.

  1. Is there a fix or a remedy for a film or haze on the headlights of my 300M?
    thanks Ralph Griffith
     
    Ralph Griffith, May 11, 2007
    #1
  2. Ralph Griffith

    Sharon Cooke Guest

    Try plastic polish & restorer.
     
    Sharon Cooke, May 11, 2007
    #2
  3. Ralph Griffith

    Bill Putney Guest

    This is a surface phenomenon. For heavy haze, polish alone will be way
    too slow and tedious.

    Use successively fine grades of wet-or-dry sandpaper starting at 1000
    and working down to 2000 or 2500 (auto parts store) - use wet. Don't
    panic when it appears slightly frosted after the finest grit. The
    sandpaper has worked it down to a much finer but very uniform haze that
    plastic polish can finish up nicely (polish will fill in the microscopic
    surface finish, and with a little elbow grease, will in fact polish it
    to water-clear).

    However, you will need to apply polish every 6 to 10 weeks to maintain
    the clarity.

    *OR*, after the sandpaper treatment, you can spray them with regular
    clear coat to give them about the same lingevity that they had when new
    (they came from the factory with clear coat on them and became hazy when
    that coating finally broke down.

    WalMart sells a kit for about $20 that has the sandpaper and polish in
    it plus a type of clear coat that you apply with a rag. Never tried it
    - might work - not sure of the quality of the clear coat and its
    longevity. But for best results/least risk, remove the headlight assy.,
    sand and polish, chemically remove any polish/wax residue, and clear
    coat with regular automotive clear coat.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, May 11, 2007
    #3
  4. Ralph Griffith

    Art Guest

    I wonder if anyone has ever tried just removing the clear coat with a
    solvent that doesn't eat the plastic and then spray with clear coat. Would
    be easier than sanding if it worked.
     
    Art, May 13, 2007
    #4
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